For decades Western development projects have been intervening in Africa's agriculture with the aim to reduce poverty and hunger. Since colonization and beyond the political independence of Africa, the West, primarily but including other countries, has practiced exclusion, systematic and structural suppression of African ways of knowing and doing. This constitutes epistemic injustice. In this paper I address a central question that has gained little attention so far. It is: do Western agricultural development projects in Africa maintain, reinforce, or even cause epistemic injustice? To answer this question, I draw on studies in African philosophy, Western philosophy and Western sociology. To empirically study epistemic injustice, I reflect ...
Oftentimes the land question is discussed in economic terms. Agricultural relations of production, p...
ABSTRACT This paper discusses three crucial terrains of contestation which weave together the kaleid...
Existing philosophies of justice have failed to challenge and overcome the peculiar African crisis o...
Why in the 21st Century the first of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) is still eradicating po...
This essay, which reflects on the “unfinished humanistic project†of decolonisation in Africa, is...
In the crowded argumentative space of political philosophies, it is often alleged that Justice is th...
This paper critically engages with the concept of development through an analysis of epistemological...
There is a strong narrative in southern Africa that posits agricultural innovations as the sine qua ...
The focus of this research is to explore and propose philosophical ideas for a just resolution to th...
Our global food system is complex and philosophers can – or should – pose critical questions about i...
Epistemic Freedom in Africa is about the struggle for African people to think, theorize, interpret t...
In this article, we reply to ‘Ethics and Epistemic Injustice in the Global South’ (Kaur et al. 2023)...
Since time immemorial, poverty reduction interventions in Sub‐Saharan Africa like everywhere in the ...
This paper critically engages with the concept of development through an analysis of epistemological...
The track record of livestock development interventions in promoting sustained poverty reduction is ...
Oftentimes the land question is discussed in economic terms. Agricultural relations of production, p...
ABSTRACT This paper discusses three crucial terrains of contestation which weave together the kaleid...
Existing philosophies of justice have failed to challenge and overcome the peculiar African crisis o...
Why in the 21st Century the first of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) is still eradicating po...
This essay, which reflects on the “unfinished humanistic project†of decolonisation in Africa, is...
In the crowded argumentative space of political philosophies, it is often alleged that Justice is th...
This paper critically engages with the concept of development through an analysis of epistemological...
There is a strong narrative in southern Africa that posits agricultural innovations as the sine qua ...
The focus of this research is to explore and propose philosophical ideas for a just resolution to th...
Our global food system is complex and philosophers can – or should – pose critical questions about i...
Epistemic Freedom in Africa is about the struggle for African people to think, theorize, interpret t...
In this article, we reply to ‘Ethics and Epistemic Injustice in the Global South’ (Kaur et al. 2023)...
Since time immemorial, poverty reduction interventions in Sub‐Saharan Africa like everywhere in the ...
This paper critically engages with the concept of development through an analysis of epistemological...
The track record of livestock development interventions in promoting sustained poverty reduction is ...
Oftentimes the land question is discussed in economic terms. Agricultural relations of production, p...
ABSTRACT This paper discusses three crucial terrains of contestation which weave together the kaleid...
Existing philosophies of justice have failed to challenge and overcome the peculiar African crisis o...